Every nation, like every individual, has a mission
which it must fulfill. It would be futile to deny that
It is long since such an appalling punishment has been seen, visited on
so many sinners. No doubt there are innocent people among the unfortunates, but
they are far fewer than is commonly imagined.
All those who have worked to separate the people from their religious
beliefs; all those who have opposed metaphysical sophistries to the laws of
property; all those who have said, "Attack anything, so long as we gain by
it"; all those who have meddled with the fundamental laws of the state;
all those who have recommended, approved, favored the violent methods used against
the king; even our restricted vision can perceive that all these have willed
the Revolution, and all who willed it have most appropriately been its victims.
It is frightening to see distinguished intellectuals fall under
Robespierre's ax. From a humane standpoint they can never be too much mourned,
but divine justice is no respecter of mathematicians or scientists. Too many
French intellectuals were instrumental in bringing about the Revolution; too
many approved and encouraged it so long as, like Tarquin's wand, it cut off
only the ruling heads. Like so many others, they said, A great revolution
cannot come about without some distress. But when a thinker justifies such
means by the end in view; when he says in his heart, A hundred thousand
murders are as nothing, provided we are free; then, if
The details would be odious; but, among those who are called innocent
victims of the Revolution, it is not much of a Frenchman whose conscience would
not remind him:
Now you see the sad fruits that your faults
have produced,
You can feel the blows that you yourselves have induced.
Our ideas on good and evil, on innocence and guilt,
are too often affected by our prejudices. We frown on men who fight with
daggers, but a duel with swords is considered honorable. We brand a man who
steals a halfpenny from a friend, but think it nothing if he steals his wife. We
pardon even if we do not make a virtue of all those flashy offenses involving
great or likable qualities, above all those rewarded by success: whereas, the
brilliant qualities which surround the guilty man blacken him in the eyes of
true justice, for whom his greatest crime is the abuse of his gifts.
Every man has certain duties to perform, and the extent of these duties
depends on his position in society and the extent of his means. The same action
is by no means equally culpable when committed by two different men. Not to
stray from our subject, the same act which results only from a mistake or a
foolish characteristic in an obscure person, thrust suddenly into unlimited
power, could be a foul crime in a bishop or a duke or a peer.
Indeed, some actions, which are excusable and even praiseworthy from an
ordinary point of view, are fundamentally infinitely criminal. For example, if
someone says, I have espoused the cause of the French Revolution in good
faith, through a pure love of liberty and my country; I have believed in my
soul and conscience that it would lead to the reform of abuses and to the
general good, we have nothing to say in reply. But the eye of him who sees
into every heart discerns the stain of sin; he discovers in a ridiculous
misunderstanding, in a small puncturing of pride, in a base or criminal
passion, the prime moving force behind those ambitions we wish to present to
the world as noble: and for him the crime is compounded by grafting the
falsehood of hypocrisy onto treason. But let us look at the nation in general.
One of the greatest possible crimes is undoubtedly an attack upon
sovereignty, no other having such terrible consequences. If sovereignty resides
in one man and this man falls victim to an outrage, the crime of lese-majesty
augments the atrocity. But if this sovereign has not deserved his fate through
any fault of his own, if his very virtues have strengthened the guilty against
him, the crime is beyond description. This is the case in the death of Louis
XVI; but what is important to note is that never has such a great crime had
more accomplices. The death of Charles I had far fewer, even though it was
possible to bring charges against him that Louis XVI did not merit. Yet many
proofs were given of the most tender and courageous concern for him; even the
executioner, who was obliged to obey, did not dare to make himself known. But
in
The indifference of the army was no less remarkable. It served the
executioners of the king much better than it had served the king himself since
it had betrayed him. It never showed the slightest sign of discontent. In sum,
never have so many taken part in such a great crime (although no doubt in
varying degrees).
It is necessary to add one important remark: it is that every offense
committed against sovereignty, in the name of the nation, is always to a
greater or lesser degree a national crime, since it is always to some degree
the fault of the nation if any faction whatever is put in a position to commit
the crime in its name. Thus, although no doubt not all Frenchmen have willed
the death of Louis XVI, the immense majority of the people have for more than
two years willed all the follies, injustices and offenses leading up to the
catastrophe of January 21st.
Now, every national crime against sovereignty is punished swiftly and
terribly; that is a law without exception. Not many days after the death of
Louis XVI, someone wrote in the Mercure universel, "Perhaps it was
not necessary go to so far; but since our legislators have taken this act on
their shoulders, let us rally round them: let us smother all hatreds and
question it no longer." Good - it was not perhaps necessary to assassinate
the king, but since the deed is done, let us talk of it no more and let us all
be good friends. What madness! Shakespeare showed more understanding when he
said:
"The single and peculiar life is bound,
With all the strength and armour of the mind,
To keep itself from noyance; but much more
That spirit upon whose weal depend and rest
The lives of many. The cease of majesty
Dies not alone; but, like a gulf, doth draw
What's near it with it."
[Hamlet, Act III, Scene iii.] Each drop of
Louis XVI's blood will cost
Where are the first national guards, the first soldiers, the first
generals who swore an oath to the nation? Where are the leaders, the idols of
that first guilty Assembly, for whom the epithet constituent will stand
as a perpetual epigraph? Where is Mirabeau, where is Bailly with his
"beautiful day"? Where is Thouret who invented the term "to
expropriate"? Where is Osselin who reported to the Assembly on the first
law proscribing the emigres? The names of revolutionary activists who have died
a violent death would be numbered in the thousands.
Yet it is here that we can appreciate order in disorder; because it is
evident, however little one reflects on it, that the great criminals of the
Revolution can fall only under the blows of their accomplices. If force alone
were to bring about what is called the counter-revolution and replace
the king on the throne, there would be no means of doing justice. For a
sensitive man, the greatest misfortune would be to judge the murderer of his
father, relatives, and friends or even the usurper of his property. However,
this is precisely what would happen in the case of a counter-revolution, as the
word is understood, because the higher judges, by the very nature of things,
would belong to the injured class, and justice, even when it was aimed only at
punishment, would have the air of vengeance. Moreover, legitimate authority
always retains some moderation in the punishment of crimes in which large
numbers have been involved. When it executes five or six criminals for the same
crime, this becomes a massacre; if it goes beyond certain limits, it becomes
detestable. In short, great crimes unfortunately demand great punishments; and
in this way it is easy to pass the limits when it is a question of crimes of
lese-majesty and flattery becomes the executioner. Would the sacred sword of
justice have fallen as relentlessly as Robespierre's guillotine? Would all the
executioners of the kingdom and every artillery horse have been summoned to
There have been nations literally condemned to death like guilty
individuals, and we can understand the reasons for this. If it was part of
God's designs to reveal to us his intentions with regard to the French
Revolution, we should read the chastisement of the French as if it were a legal
decree. But what should we understand beyond this? Is not this chastisement
apparent? Have we not seen
Yet, in this cruel and disastrous war, there are points of interest, and
admiration follows grief turn by turn. Let us take the most terrible epoch of
the Revolution; let us suppose that, under the government of the diabolical
Committee of Public Safety, the army by a startling change became suddenly
royalist; let us suppose that it rallied the primary assemblies to its side and
freely named the worthiest and most enlightened men to guide it in this
difficult position; let us suppose, finally, that one of these representatives
of the army rose and said:
"Brave and loyal soldiers, there are occasions when all human
wisdom is reduced to choosing between different evils. It is no doubt hard to
fight for the Committee of Public Safety, but it would be yet more disastrous
to turn our arms against it. The moment the army meddles in politics, the state
will be dissolved and the enemies of
This man would have spoken very wisely. In fact, the army has
appreciated this hypothetical argument without knowing it; and the terror on
the one hand and immorality and extravagance on the other, have done precisely
what a consummate and almost prophetic wisdom would have dictated to the army. Fundamentally,
it can be seen that, the revolutionary movement once having taken root,
The king has never had an ally; although he was never imprudent enough
to state the fact, it is quite evident that the coalition had no love for
French territorial integrity. However, how was the coalition to be resisted? By
what supernatural means could the European conspiracy be broken? Only the evil
genius of Robespierre could achieve this miracle. The revolutionary government
hardened the French spirit, by drenching it in blood: it heightened soldiers'
morale and doubled their power by a ferocious despair and contempt for life
which derived from fury. The horror of the gallows, pushing the citizen to the
frontiers, built up military strength in proportion as it destroyed the least
internal resistance. Every life, all wealth, every power was in the hands of
the revolutionary government; and this Leviathan, drunk with blood and success,
the most appalling phenomenon ever seen and doubtless that ever will be seen,
was both a frightful punishment of the French and the only means of saving
France.
What were the royalists asking for when they demanded a
counter-revolution such as they envisaged, that is to say, brought about
suddenly and by force? They were asking for the conquest of
It seems that all the monsters spawned by the Revolution have worked
only for the monarchy. Through them, the luster of victories has won the
world's admiration and has surrounded the name of
This same idea that everything works for the advantage of the French
monarchy leads me to believe that any royalist revolution is impossible before
the war ends; for the restoration of the Crown would weaken suddenly the whole machinery
of the state. The black magic operating at this moment would vanish like a mist
before the sun. Kindness, clemency, justice, all the gentle and peaceful
virtues would suddenly reappear and bring back with them a certain general
gentleness of character, a certain cheerfulness entirely opposed to the somber
rigor of the revolutionary regime. No more requisitions, no more legal thefts,
no more violence. Would the generals, preceded by the white flag, call revolutionary
the inhabitants of the invaded areas who legitimately defended themselves? And
would they enjoin them not to move on pain of being shot as rebels? These
horrors, very useful to the future king, could not, however, be employed by
him; he would then have only human means at his disposal. He would be on a
level with his enemies; and what would happen at that moment of suspension
which necessarily accompanies the transition from one government to another? I
do not know. I am well aware that the great conquests of the French seem to put
the integrity of the kingdom beyond dispute. (I even intend to touch here on
the reason for these conquests.) However it still appears more advantageous to
On the other hand, it is clear that a violent revolution, far from
curing the people, would confirm them in their errors and they would never pardon
the power that snatched their dreams from them. Since it was the people,
properly speaking, or the masses, that the rebels needed to overturn
Let us now glance at the outrageous persecution stirred up against the
national religion and its ministers: it is one of the most interesting facets
of the Revolution.
It cannot be denied that the French clergy was in need of reform; and,
though I am very far from taking up the vulgar attacks on the clergy,
nonetheless it appears to me incontestable that wealth, luxury, and a general
tendency toward laxity had lowered this great body of men; that it was often
possible to find under the surplice a man of the world rather than an apostle;
and finally that, in the years immediately before the Revolution, the clergy
had fallen, almost as much as the army, from the place it had occupied in
public esteem.
The first blow aimed at the Church was the appropriation of its estates;
the second was the constitutional oath; and these two tyrannical measures
started the reformation. The oath screened the priests, if it can be so expressed.
All who took it, save a few exceptions whom we can ignore, saw themselves led
by stages into the abyss of crime and disgrace; opinion has only one view of
these apostates.
The faithful priests, recommended to this same opinion by an initial act
of firmness, won even more renown by the bravery with which they have been able
to bear sufferings and even death in defense of their faith. The massacre of
Carmes is comparable in its beauty to anything of this sort that ecclesiastical
history can offer.
No more revolting tyranny can be imagined than that which expelled them
from their country by thousands, against all justice and decency; but on this
point, as in all the others, the crimes of the French tyrants became the
weapons of
The property of the clergy having been dissipated, no despicable motive
can for a long time to come attract new members to it: so that everything
combines to revive the clergy. There is reason to believe, moreover, that the
contemplation of the work with which it is charged will give to it a degree of
exaltation which raises men above themselves and makes them capable of great
things.
Add to these circumstances the ferment of ideas in certain European
countries, the inspiring opinions of several great men, and that kind of
disquiet which is affecting religious people, especially in Protestant
countries, and is pushing them along unwonted paths.
Notice at the same time the storm rumbling over Italy, Rome menaced as
well as Geneva by the power that wants the destruction of all sects, and the
national supremacy of religion abolished in Holland by a decree of the National
Convention. If Providence deletes, it is no doubt in order to rewrite.
I notice that when great systems of belief have established themselves in the
world, they have been favored by great conquests in the formation of great
sovereignties, and the reason can clearly be seen.
How indeed have these remarkable schemes which have baffled all human
foresight come about in one day? In truth, there is a temptation to believe
that political revolution is only a secondary object of the great plan which is
developing before our eyes with such terrible majesty.
I talked, at the beginning, of the leadership that France exercises over
the rest of Europe. Providence, which always fits means to ends and gives to
nations, as to individuals, the instruments necessary to accomplish their
destiny, has in this way given to the French nation two weapons and, so to
speak, two hands with which to mold the world, its language and the spirit of
proselytism that forms the core of its character; so that it has always the
ability and the wish to influence other men.
The power, I almost said the royalty, of the French language is
apparent; this cannot be seriously disputed. As for the spirit of proselytism,
it is as obvious as the sun; from the dress designer to the philosopher, it is
the foremost trait of the national character.
This proselytism is commonly ridiculed, and really it often merits it,
particularly in the forms it takes, but fundamentally it has a function.
It is a constant law of the moral world that every function
produces a duty. The Gallican Church was the cornerstone of the Catholic system
or, more properly, since there is in truth only one system, the Christian
system. Although perhaps they doubt it, the Churches opposing the universal
Church exist only by virtue of it, being like those parasitic plants, those
sterile mistletoes which draw their nurture from and weaken the tree that
supports them.
From the fact that the action and reaction of opposing powers is always
equal, the greatest efforts of the goddess of Reason against Christianity were
made in France; the enemy attacked the citadel.
The French clergy should not therefore fall asleep; it has a thousand
reasons for believing that it is called to a high destiny; and the same
arguments that show it why it is suffering allow it also to believe itself
fated for a crucial task.
In a word, if a moral revolution does not occur in Europe, if religious
feeling is not strengthened in this part of the world, the social bond will be
destroyed. Nothing can be predicted, and anything may be expected. But if any
change for the better does come, either analogies, induction, and conjectural
skills are useless or else it is France that is called to produce the change.
This is above all what leads me to believe that the French Revolution is
a watershed in history and that its consequences of every kind will be felt far
beyond the time of its outburst and the limits of its birthplace.
Political considerations confirm this view. How many European powers
have deceived themselves over France! How many have dreamed up vain endeavorsl
You who think yourselves free because you have no judges on this earth, never
say: This suits me; DISCITE JUSTITIAM MONITE! What hand, at once severe
and paternal, scourged France with every imaginable plague, and held sway with
supernatural means by turning every effort of its enemies against themselves? Let
no one come to speak to us of assignats and the power of numbers, for the
possibility of assignats and of the power of numbers is itself the work of the
supernatural. Moreover it is neither through paper money nor through numerical
advantage that the winds guided the French ships and thrust back those of their
enemies; that winter gave the French bridges of ice just when they needed them;
that kings who impede them die conveniently; that they invade Italy without
artillery, and that the most reputedly brave armies of the world, although
equal in number, throw down their arms and allow themselves to be taken
captives....
In fact, the punishment of the French breaks all the ordinary rules, as
does also the protection accorded to France: but these two miracles combined
serve to reinforce one another, and present one of the most astonishing sights
of human history.
As events unfold, other and more wonderful reasons and relationships
will show themselves. Moreover, I see only a fraction of those which a more
perceptive insight could have discovered at this time.
The horrible effusion of human blood caused by this great upheaval is a
terrible means, yet it is a means as much as a punishment, and can give rise to
some interesting reflections.